Alicia J
Diamond Member
- Mar 22, 2026
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White working class voters with no college degrees have been Trump's strongest voting bloc since 2016.....and he is losing them in droves.
This is devastating news for Trump and the Republican Party in November. They are going to get destroyed in November and there will be some surprising upsets in red states for the Democrats.
Like all Americans, white working class voters are fed up with Trump's broken promises about inflation and lowering prices and the cost of living.
And they certainly don't want to hear mentally ill Trump drone on about his $1 billion ballroom and reflecting pool when they are struggling to make ends meet. --
This is devastating news for Trump and the Republican Party in November. They are going to get destroyed in November and there will be some surprising upsets in red states for the Democrats.
Like all Americans, white working class voters are fed up with Trump's broken promises about inflation and lowering prices and the cost of living.
And they certainly don't want to hear mentally ill Trump drone on about his $1 billion ballroom and reflecting pool when they are struggling to make ends meet. --
Just outside the bar where the TV warned of rising gas prices, Dottie Cirino, 64, predicted that President Donald Trump would figure it out.
“He’ll get ’em back down,” said Cirino, part of the White working-class who for a decade formed the core of Trump’s base.
Annette Dombrowksi, a 64-year-old janitor at the same factory as Cirino, also voted for Trump. But she was starting to worry.
“You could be paying these prices for a while,” she said quietly.
White voters without college degrees like Dombrowski, who have powered Trump’s victories since 2016, are growing frustrated with his second term. In a striking shift, the group that voted to reelect Trump by a huge margin is now net-negative on how Trump is handling his job in several polls. They join other Americans across demographic lines souring on the president’s second term, especially his handling of the economy.
The swing is stark: 54 percent of White voters without a college degree disapproved of Trump’s performance in a CBS News poll this month, up from 32 percent in February 2025 and 45 percent in February of this year. It’s a sobering sign for Republicans heading into the midterms and working to turn out the voters who carried Trump to victory in 2024.
Dombrowski said she believed Trump when he promised during his last campaign to lower prices. She watched excitedly alongside her boyfriend last year as Trump signed one executive order after another. But now her bills for gas, groceries and other necessities have gone up.
“I don’t even want to vote for anybody in the next election,” said Dombrowski, once a reliable voter in the midterms. “I don’t care, because they’re all crap.”
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